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Nov 2, 2012
11/12
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energy falling 1.7%. and technology down 1.5% falling commodity prices weighed on some of their respective stock sectors. oil fell more than two dollars per barrel, settling at its lowest price since june. the u.s. dollar was higher on the back of the employment numbers and a more expensive dollar can put downward pressure on oil. oil giant chevron also hurt the energy sector and the dow. chevron had the biggest percentage loss among dow stocks. chevron did not make as much money has anticipated in the third quarter. earnings per share were well short of estimates. similar to exxon mobil, chevron also saw its production and fuel sales fall, hit by hurricane isaac in augt, legal troubles in bra al and a refinery fire in california. b shares fell 2.8%, closing at their lowest price since july. two bright spots for chevron were its smaller refineries processing cheaper oil from montana and north dakota. meantime, chesapeake energy fell to a three month low, down 7.9%. the company has been trying to reduce it
energy falling 1.7%. and technology down 1.5% falling commodity prices weighed on some of their respective stock sectors. oil fell more than two dollars per barrel, settling at its lowest price since june. the u.s. dollar was higher on the back of the employment numbers and a more expensive dollar can put downward pressure on oil. oil giant chevron also hurt the energy sector and the dow. chevron had the biggest percentage loss among dow stocks. chevron did not make as much money has...
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Oct 31, 2012
10/12
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department of energy. that's down from more than 8 million without electricity last night. in addition to new jersey, more than 1 in 10 customers in connecticut, new hampshire, pennsylvania, rhode island and west virginia have no power. ny nuclear power plants remain offline with two others operateding to produce capacity. >> we're joined from jupiter florida. what are your colleagues facing lewis? >> they're facing restoration process with a storm that covers so many states and has done so much damage as everybody is seeing on tv. they have many, many lines down, poles down, transformers damaged. substations that are under water, and have to get dried out. equipment vault that is are flooded. they lot of work ahead of them. >> tom: how does a ceo -- how do you begin to prioritize all of that work? >> actually, the priority is pretty well established before the storm even hits. every utiltd works with emergency operations center and develops a priority list. typically the way it works is critical infrastructure customers get their power back first. critical infrastructure c
department of energy. that's down from more than 8 million without electricity last night. in addition to new jersey, more than 1 in 10 customers in connecticut, new hampshire, pennsylvania, rhode island and west virginia have no power. ny nuclear power plants remain offline with two others operateding to produce capacity. >> we're joined from jupiter florida. what are your colleagues facing lewis? >> they're facing restoration process with a storm that covers so many states and has...
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Oct 29, 2012
10/12
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we will talk about its potential impact on everything from economic growth to energy prices. that and more tonight on "n.b.r."! as we go on the air tonight, hurricane sandy is ready to make landfall in the u.s., already it's an historic storm, with historic preparations. stock markets closed. and coast lines evacuated with tens of millions of people sitting in the forecast path of the massive storm. sandy is a huge storm expected to come ashore in southern new jersey. but the hurricane force winds have been battering the eastern seaboard for hours. those winds extend out 175 miles from the center of the storm. those winds are pushing the atlantic ocean up and over many coast-lines. from rhode island, south to the jersey shore. coastal flooding is a significant risk thanks to the storm surge, potentially reaching 11 feet in new york harbor. battery park on the tip of manhattan is under a mandatory evacuation, as waves already have topped the sea wall. low lying areas are at substantial risk of flood waters, including the wall street area, especially if the worst of the surge h
we will talk about its potential impact on everything from economic growth to energy prices. that and more tonight on "n.b.r."! as we go on the air tonight, hurricane sandy is ready to make landfall in the u.s., already it's an historic storm, with historic preparations. stock markets closed. and coast lines evacuated with tens of millions of people sitting in the forecast path of the massive storm. sandy is a huge storm expected to come ashore in southern new jersey. but the...
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Nov 1, 2012
11/12
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america's biggest publicly traded energy company, exxonu mobil, saw production fall to its lowest level in three years last quarter. still, earnings per share were stronger than anticipated, helped by profits doubling in its refining business. but production fell more than expected. the company explained part of the drop was due to moving drilling rigs from going after low price natural gas to higher margin oil. shares were up a fraction, rising a half a percent. volume was stronger than usual. the stock is up 20% in the past year. the biggest retailer was the biggest drag on the dow with the market trying to gauge sandy's impact on business at walmart. the stock fell 2.1%. 294 wal-mart facilities were closed at one point during hurricane sandy, thanks to mandatory evacuations, safety concerns, and power outages. after the close, the focus was on starbucks. consumers continue buying their coffee and lattes. earnings were 46 cents per share. that's a penny more than estimates. revenues and profit margins were up by double digits each. shares were up 1.6% during the regular session. they'
america's biggest publicly traded energy company, exxonu mobil, saw production fall to its lowest level in three years last quarter. still, earnings per share were stronger than anticipated, helped by profits doubling in its refining business. but production fell more than expected. the company explained part of the drop was due to moving drilling rigs from going after low price natural gas to higher margin oil. shares were up a fraction, rising a half a percent. volume was stronger than usual....
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Oct 29, 2012
10/12
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there's no question that there is more energy out there in the republican base and at events he's been holding. does this affect that in some way that would be detrimental to him? these are all he questions that we can't answer tonight. >> woodruff: because we just don't know when they're going to be back on the trail. there's no way to gauge that. >> that's exactly right. i mean, we obviously know they'll be back out at some point later in the week. but we don't know quite they will be able to go. we don't know what states they won't be able to visit that they had planned to visit in the final stretch of this. the campaign manager for president obama was on a conference call today and a reporter from north carolina said, will we see the president back in north carolina before next tuesday? and he hedged on that. he said we're doing everything we can to win but we're on a day-to-day assessment of the schedule. for governor romney it's the same kind of situation. there are places he may want to try to go to between now and tuesday that he's not going to be able to get to simply because
there's no question that there is more energy out there in the republican base and at events he's been holding. does this affect that in some way that would be detrimental to him? these are all he questions that we can't answer tonight. >> woodruff: because we just don't know when they're going to be back on the trail. there's no way to gauge that. >> that's exactly right. i mean, we obviously know they'll be back out at some point later in the week. but we don't know quite they...
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Nov 2, 2012
11/12
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neighborhoods in new york and new jersey remain under water while energy companies work to repair downed power line millions suspect another night without electricity. it may be over a week before power is restored in some places. as dawn broke this morning parts of the subway heaved into motion for the first time since sunday night. commuters eager to return to work with restrictions to auto transport. few in the northeast have not felt the effects of hurricane sand y. experts estimate the disaster will cost up to $50 billion but none forgot i that the true cost of the hurricane lies in the lost of human life. as we learn more about the events of this week some question about greater preparedness could have helped avert tragedy. an equally important question what is the relationship between these frequent hurricanes, sea level and desire to live next to the water. we look at the question of the relationship between the devastation of hurricane sandy and the rise of global warming. today michael bloomberg of new york endorsed president obama. here's part of what the mayor said. our clima
neighborhoods in new york and new jersey remain under water while energy companies work to repair downed power line millions suspect another night without electricity. it may be over a week before power is restored in some places. as dawn broke this morning parts of the subway heaved into motion for the first time since sunday night. commuters eager to return to work with restrictions to auto transport. few in the northeast have not felt the effects of hurricane sand y. experts estimate the...
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Oct 31, 2012
10/12
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so we're seeing new terms called green energy instead of climate change because polls show people are skeptical and dubious of those motivations. they believe it's been overblown and it turns people off. >> suarez: joseph romm, why haven't we heard more about this topic during the national campaign? >> well, of course, mitt romney gets money from fossil fuel interests that's one reason he even opposes a clean energy tax credit for wind. obama, i think, is just misreading the polls entirely. the latest polling shows that -- i think ken is right. when global warming becomes local that the public becomes concerned about it. that's why the polls in the last two years have shown the public is increasingly concerned and this is particularly true of independent voters also. they are very concerned about their local pollution but also the extreme weather that they've been seeing. who could miss $14 billion extreme weather disasters in this country last year and over $7 this year. everyone sees the weather is going crazy and it's affecting them. it's not going to be affecting distant people in
so we're seeing new terms called green energy instead of climate change because polls show people are skeptical and dubious of those motivations. they believe it's been overblown and it turns people off. >> suarez: joseph romm, why haven't we heard more about this topic during the national campaign? >> well, of course, mitt romney gets money from fossil fuel interests that's one reason he even opposes a clean energy tax credit for wind. obama, i think, is just misreading the polls...
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Oct 28, 2012
10/12
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energy. but we didn't talk about how we were going to regulate the uses of the energy and the getting of the energy. and we didn't talk about the effects of the ways we would get it on either the environment or, more broadly, on the globe. >> nonetheless, did the debates matter? do you think they've had an impact on the campaign? >> yes, and what we, what we saw across the debates is what we expected to see. we saw learning about those issues that were addressed. more accurate placement of candidates on the areas in which they differ. what we didn't see is more accurate placement on areas that they're similar because the news never stresses areas in which they're similar. but nonetheless, we've seen learning across the debates in our annenberg survey. >> but my sense is that when there is no penalty for lying or as jonathan swift says in the last part of "gulliver's", for saying the thing that is not so, that the things one learns about what people say are completely irrelevant. governor romn
energy. but we didn't talk about how we were going to regulate the uses of the energy and the getting of the energy. and we didn't talk about the effects of the ways we would get it on either the environment or, more broadly, on the globe. >> nonetheless, did the debates matter? do you think they've had an impact on the campaign? >> yes, and what we, what we saw across the debates is what we expected to see. we saw learning about those issues that were addressed. more accurate...
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Oct 30, 2012
10/12
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some of public trade utilities hit, consolidated edison, pepco, ppl and first energy. travis miller covers them for morningstar. travis, how will these companies pay for the repair job they're facing ahead of them? >> there's no question that utilities are in for a huge bill from this. and really, the last two years they've been hit multiple times with large rep pair bills and outages. if you're looking for utilities that come from repair costs they have to make, and putteding up flyers to bring back the power plants online, but also the lost revenue they have when utiltd customers are out of power and can't pay their bills because the system is out. >> tom: travis, do they have the operating cash flow to pay for these? are they going to have to borrow mony and issue bonds? >> >> we think the utilities, are well capitalized and have plenty of cash. in the scheme of things, these are multibillion companies, and you're probably talking about upwards of a billion dollars, our estimate for the bill, and at least for new york and new jersey. >> tom: you think they're in goo
some of public trade utilities hit, consolidated edison, pepco, ppl and first energy. travis miller covers them for morningstar. travis, how will these companies pay for the repair job they're facing ahead of them? >> there's no question that utilities are in for a huge bill from this. and really, the last two years they've been hit multiple times with large rep pair bills and outages. if you're looking for utilities that come from repair costs they have to make, and putteding up flyers...
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Oct 27, 2012
10/12
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. >> and harness our technology for new energy solutions. >> around the globe, the people of boeing are working together to build a belter tomorrow. >>that's why we're here. additional funding is also provided by the annenberg foundation, the corporation for public broadcasting, and by contributions to your pbs stations from viewers like you. once again, live from washington, moderator gwen ifill. gwen: good evening. it's about 8:00 p.m. eastern time two fridays before the election and according to the app on my iphone, we have 10 days, 23 hours, 15 minutes and 53 seconds before the polls close. accord dog every one of what seems like a thousand polls taken this week, this thing say true dead heat. so what are the candidates up to? they are releasing new ads every day. it's said that character is what we do when no one is looking. mitt romney thought no one was looking when he attacked 47% of americans. his company shipped jobs overseas. >> higher deficits, chronic unemployment, a president who admits he can't work with congress. >> you can't change washington from the inside. >> but he
. >> and harness our technology for new energy solutions. >> around the globe, the people of boeing are working together to build a belter tomorrow. >>that's why we're here. additional funding is also provided by the annenberg foundation, the corporation for public broadcasting, and by contributions to your pbs stations from viewers like you. once again, live from washington, moderator gwen ifill. gwen: good evening. it's about 8:00 p.m. eastern time two fridays before the...
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Nov 4, 2012
11/12
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going to put in to place economic policies that will create growth which will create the jobs, be the energy to small businesses start growing again. >> we asked the experts whether reproductive rights is a decisive issue for women voters this year. >> it is for the barack obama campaign. they think that's the way they're going to keep their women. suggest that women would vote about who's going to pay for their contraception, that is more of an issue than are my loved ones working, am i working, are my kids going to have an opportunity when they graduate from college. >> the president especially lately, as of late, he has said, you know, look, he doesn't believe that men should be legislating women's bodies and he supports, uh, he really supports women in that way in making sure that they have what they need. with, you know, the different characters out there, making statements about rape and about abortion and how they feel about it and he basically says, you know, look, we should not be deciding that. >> and the experts' views on swaying undecided women voters? >> this election is about t
going to put in to place economic policies that will create growth which will create the jobs, be the energy to small businesses start growing again. >> we asked the experts whether reproductive rights is a decisive issue for women voters this year. >> it is for the barack obama campaign. they think that's the way they're going to keep their women. suggest that women would vote about who's going to pay for their contraception, that is more of an issue than are my loved ones working,...
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Oct 28, 2012
10/12
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i feel energy. i feel mysterious forces working through my body and i see them in other people. >> reporter: weeks is among the 46 million americans that our poll found have no religious affiliation, almost one in five. but they're not entirely secular. about a third describe themselves as "spiritual, but not religious." >> yeah, i think that's a pretty good description. as a matter of fact i think i say that all the time. i'm spiritual, but not religious. >> i definitely don't call myself religious at all so i would think i am spiritual, where i believe we're all connected in some way but i'm not religious in any way. >> reporter: kim weeks has come a long way from the conservative southern methodist church of her childhood and the religious home she grew up in. >> we didn't go so far as do regular bible readings but we weren't that far from it. i mean god was, and jesus, were both present in our daily lives, and a daily discourse. >> reporter: things began to change when she was 12. her parents di
i feel energy. i feel mysterious forces working through my body and i see them in other people. >> reporter: weeks is among the 46 million americans that our poll found have no religious affiliation, almost one in five. but they're not entirely secular. about a third describe themselves as "spiritual, but not religious." >> yeah, i think that's a pretty good description. as a matter of fact i think i say that all the time. i'm spiritual, but not religious. >> i...
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Oct 29, 2012
10/12
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but i guess i was looking more for a new york energy and it didn't have it. so i then went to london, 1976, to study kpun cases. i went to california to do international relations then went to london-- it was really just any excuse to be able to be kept by my parents in a way. in london i fell into photography. >> rose: how did you fall into it. >> it's a really funny story. i believe so much that things come to you. and basically i went to a friend's house for lunch and there was a foted owe of himself on his mantle piece. and i said what a great photograph. and he told me this girl studying photography here took it. i said i have always heard of this girl i would love to meet her. i went to meet her at her school. when a rifed if he school she said to me what are you doing. i said well i have applied to the university. and they have me don't need me for next year but i need a school if i want to stay because i need a student visa. she said why don't you join the school. an eye rannian girl left the school we are only six students and if you can afford it th
but i guess i was looking more for a new york energy and it didn't have it. so i then went to london, 1976, to study kpun cases. i went to california to do international relations then went to london-- it was really just any excuse to be able to be kept by my parents in a way. in london i fell into photography. >> rose: how did you fall into it. >> it's a really funny story. i believe so much that things come to you. and basically i went to a friend's house for lunch and there was a...
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Nov 1, 2012
11/12
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>> because you get-- there's-- yeah, because there's an energy you get from it. you know. i like doinga what i'm doing. i like directing. i like acting on stage. and then i like acting on film. . >> rose: and you can do them all. >> well, i can try. >> rose: plus whatever this is, you can be cool. >> year, right. >> rose: this is not the guy i saw the backside of. >> oh, man that was-- that was skinny man. it i lost, like, 15 pounds just to do that-- i put it all back on, too. that's cool. >> rose: great to see you. >> my pleasure. >> rose: thank you, great to see you. >> thank you. >> rose: the movie is called "flight" it opens friday, november 2. "flight." back in a moment, stay with us. sheila bair is here. she served as chairman of the federal deposit chairman insurance corporation, known as f.d.i.c., from july 2006 until july 2011. she was one of the key players in the government's response to the financial crisis and among the first to identify the foreclosure problem and call for action to help troubled homeowners. her leadership of the f.d.i.c. through it tumultuou
>> because you get-- there's-- yeah, because there's an energy you get from it. you know. i like doinga what i'm doing. i like directing. i like acting on stage. and then i like acting on film. . >> rose: and you can do them all. >> well, i can try. >> rose: plus whatever this is, you can be cool. >> year, right. >> rose: this is not the guy i saw the backside of. >> oh, man that was-- that was skinny man. it i lost, like, 15 pounds just to do that-- i...
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Nov 2, 2012
11/12
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. >> energy time, and political capital to pass legislation state after state to make it more difficult to vote, primarily for latinos. and third they don't campaign in their neighborhoods or their community t they don't ask for their vote, and finally mitt romney and his unguarded moment at boca raton in his 47 percent speech taped without his knowledge says that he would be better off if he could run as a latino because his father was born in mexico. i mean if you are a 19 or 20-year-old latino this is going to cost your support for the republican party as a generation. they ignored george w. bush, jeb bush, his brother who has been quite enlightened on the subject and said you cannot, in this country, continue to win only with white people's votes. and i just, i think that the very enlightened voices i heard in iowa, in the piece, you know, i hope the republicans heed them. because we are looking at an election right now where barack obama will probably get over 70% of latino vote. >> woodruff: so a net negative for the republicans? >> oh, yeah, increasingly. and i agree with the pol
. >> energy time, and political capital to pass legislation state after state to make it more difficult to vote, primarily for latinos. and third they don't campaign in their neighborhoods or their community t they don't ask for their vote, and finally mitt romney and his unguarded moment at boca raton in his 47 percent speech taped without his knowledge says that he would be better off if he could run as a latino because his father was born in mexico. i mean if you are a 19 or...
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Oct 31, 2012
10/12
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deal with the debt and deficit and job creation in the short-term and focus on to the big issues like energy and immigration but they are all hard. >> rose: don't you think that the public, i am asking, i am real naive about this, they want boldness, they want leadership, they want someon someone that wl level with them or not? in the end you think the evidence that the road to believing what the naivete of me is strewn with the bodies of defeated politicians. >> well i am not sure anyone i can think of has tried at the level of specificity that would be required in this case. i don't know that we have any strewn bodies to look at. >> in other words -- >> the bodies nobody would even try it. >> it would be mice if a michael bloomberg had run or somebody could run and put pressure on them, the way per rote, perot put president on bush 41, but perot didn't do it by being particularly specific but did it by talking about the issues. >> rose: focus on the problems. they do a bit of that, the fiscal cliff. >> they do, but i will single out governor romney in one specific but the same applies to t
deal with the debt and deficit and job creation in the short-term and focus on to the big issues like energy and immigration but they are all hard. >> rose: don't you think that the public, i am asking, i am real naive about this, they want boldness, they want leadership, they want someon someone that wl level with them or not? in the end you think the evidence that the road to believing what the naivete of me is strewn with the bodies of defeated politicians. >> well i am not sure...
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Nov 1, 2012
11/12
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"are high energy prices killing you?" "john ward had a choice." instead you raised their taxes. "mothers against child predators." "certified to be true and accurate." >> well, yeah, you can say anything you want. >> ryssdal: so these went out a week before the election. >> less than that, within the last four days. you have no time to respond that way. >> ryssdal: ward lost that primary to mike miller by just 24 votes. >> one of the biggest shockers of the primary election that year, because he was thought to be in safe shape politically, a conservative republican, but got picked off by these groups. >> the impact of receiving these graphic things right before you went to the polls. it was very, very effective. >> ryssdal: john ward wasn't alone. these kinds of flyers started to show up in mailboxes all across montana in 2008. it was something new. the tone and tactics rubbed some people the wrong way and a complaint was filed that soon led to an investigation. what nobody could foresee, thought, was that these mailers were aboar to stt a fight that, in time, would go all the w
"are high energy prices killing you?" "john ward had a choice." instead you raised their taxes. "mothers against child predators." "certified to be true and accurate." >> well, yeah, you can say anything you want. >> ryssdal: so these went out a week before the election. >> less than that, within the last four days. you have no time to respond that way. >> ryssdal: ward lost that primary to mike miller by just 24 votes. >>...
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Oct 27, 2012
10/12
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the school yearbook shows where he put his energy. >> romney at cranbrook was a belonger. he wasn't a good athlete, but he was the manager of the hockey team, he was on the cross- country team, he was a cheerleader. he was very active in everything he could be. he was part of the place very deeply. >> narrator: during that time, mitt's dad decided to leave business and head into politics. michigan was a powerful democratic stronghold, but george romney had a maverick streak. he ran as a liberal-to-moderate republican. and mitt watched as he won. >> michigan can light the authentic path to a fuller and higher expression of freedom in america. thank you very much. (crowd cheers) >> it's a little bit striking how involved he is in george's political activities from a fairly young age. >> narrator: his dad thought civil rights were worth fighting for. as a teenager, mitt was less interested in the issues than being with his dad. >> the word from his family is that he was not necessarily interested in politics as ideology. but there was always something about his father and his
the school yearbook shows where he put his energy. >> romney at cranbrook was a belonger. he wasn't a good athlete, but he was the manager of the hockey team, he was on the cross- country team, he was a cheerleader. he was very active in everything he could be. he was part of the place very deeply. >> narrator: during that time, mitt's dad decided to leave business and head into politics. michigan was a powerful democratic stronghold, but george romney had a maverick streak. he ran...
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Oct 28, 2012
10/12
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we need more renewable energy. today renewable energy gives us 10% of our electricity. by 2035, that will rise to 16%. we should try to move towards it faster. but even if we were to succeed, we would still need to use fossil fuels for the majority of our energy needs. governments around the world, including the united states, have provided enormous help to the fossil fuel industry, in many ways, from building out the infrastructure it uses to protecting our supplies of oil from the middle east. even fracing but the way was developed with the help of the department of energy. so it's perfectly sensible to say government should provide support to the technologies of the future as well. that support should mainly go towards research that would lead to technological breakthroughs. but we should also help these nais ent industries, wind and solar, to achieve scale, just as we helped the computer industry in the 1950s and 1960s. but having done all of that, it is clear that we will still need fossil fuels for the majority of our energy for decades to come. that means choosin
we need more renewable energy. today renewable energy gives us 10% of our electricity. by 2035, that will rise to 16%. we should try to move towards it faster. but even if we were to succeed, we would still need to use fossil fuels for the majority of our energy needs. governments around the world, including the united states, have provided enormous help to the fossil fuel industry, in many ways, from building out the infrastructure it uses to protecting our supplies of oil from the middle...
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Oct 28, 2012
10/12
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a business to import energy. so you build this terminal to import liquid natural gas. a funny thing happened. >> it wasn't funny. >> it wasn't funny for the ceo of sheniere energy because his company almost went bankrupt. the low levels of natural gas production in america suddenly gave way to a boom, thanks to shale gas. >> how big is the shale gas revolution in america? >> it's stupefyingly large. >> shale gas is a form of natural gas extracted from shale rock deep underground through a special drilling process called hydraulic fracturing or fracking. in 2000 shale gas accounted for only 2% of all natural gas in in 2012 it accounts for 32%. that's because america happens to be the saudi arabia of shale gas, with big shale depos it's over much of the country. here's the kicker, when you burn natural gas to produce energy, it emits roughly half as much greenhouse gas as coal. >> natural gas is the perfect complement to wind and solar. not on does it emit half as much co 2 as coal, you can turn it on or off when t
a business to import energy. so you build this terminal to import liquid natural gas. a funny thing happened. >> it wasn't funny. >> it wasn't funny for the ceo of sheniere energy because his company almost went bankrupt. the low levels of natural gas production in america suddenly gave way to a boom, thanks to shale gas. >> how big is the shale gas revolution in america? >> it's stupefyingly large. >> shale gas is a form of natural gas extracted from shale rock...
SFGTV2: San Francisco Government Television
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Nov 3, 2012
11/12
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we have total energy use per floor. we also have energy use in the building today that will show information and percentages on how much is being used today versus an average day. there's also information from solar, how much solar the building is producing, and showing the savings from solar. we also have reclaimed water and that will be shown per month. the center section is dedicated to water, wastewater and power. we have live information showing us how much wastewater has been treated so far from the night before. there is also a twitter feed and information that anyone that comes in can see, you know, current news and information from the twitter. there's also bart information, when is the next bart leaving, when is the next train departing. and there is weather, hetch hetchy, and weather at san francisco. >> the physical arts wall is comprised of 54 feet, 160 high-definition monitors that has a 3-d motion detection that allows you to approach the wall and then to look at the contents that is there in front of you
we have total energy use per floor. we also have energy use in the building today that will show information and percentages on how much is being used today versus an average day. there's also information from solar, how much solar the building is producing, and showing the savings from solar. we also have reclaimed water and that will be shown per month. the center section is dedicated to water, wastewater and power. we have live information showing us how much wastewater has been treated so...
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Oct 29, 2012
10/12
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now he wants to pool energy someplace. in government they scrapped energy supplies. now he wants to refer the big six to the competition. then he said he wouldn't do it because it would be wrong. i'm all in favor of switching but this is ridiculous. >> let's talk about my record as energy secretary. . i want to thank him for the document last thursday. it reveals something very interesting mr. speaker. while i was the energy secretary, the average jewel fuel bill fell by 110 pounds. under him it's risen by 200 pounds. i'll compare my record to his any day. now let's go on look the part-time chancellor is giving advice again. and i'm coming to one of his favorite subject it is west coast main line. the former railway secretary now the northern ireland secretary told us about the franchise process. we've tested it very robustly and the former secretary of state of national development. she hasn't won the job but she's down the bench over there. she said the process is robust. we learned about floors in the process were raised by the bidders as long ago as may 20th. can
now he wants to pool energy someplace. in government they scrapped energy supplies. now he wants to refer the big six to the competition. then he said he wouldn't do it because it would be wrong. i'm all in favor of switching but this is ridiculous. >> let's talk about my record as energy secretary. . i want to thank him for the document last thursday. it reveals something very interesting mr. speaker. while i was the energy secretary, the average jewel fuel bill fell by 110 pounds. under...
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energy right. hundred meters of. electricity generated. take advantage of lower prices and pump the water back into the upper reservoir more often than not. demand in the morning and. they can also be used in tandem with plants balanced approach to energy. pumped storage power. turbines each with a capacity of two hundred megawatts of generation and two hundred twenty megawatts and pumping about it was designed to regulate the energy balance in moscow region and neighboring areas in central russia the power plant was built back in the one nine hundred eighty s. in the one nine hundred ninety s. it did reach design to capacity in two thousand but is currently operates at full power. this practice to storage power stations are normally placed in mountainous areas with greater water pressure european part of russia doesn't have the kind of terrain however still managed to set up a fairly efficient facility in spite of an average incline of around one hundred. stations efficiency is seventy four percent of you couldn't hear it as station is ru
energy right. hundred meters of. electricity generated. take advantage of lower prices and pump the water back into the upper reservoir more often than not. demand in the morning and. they can also be used in tandem with plants balanced approach to energy. pumped storage power. turbines each with a capacity of two hundred megawatts of generation and two hundred twenty megawatts and pumping about it was designed to regulate the energy balance in moscow region and neighboring areas in central...
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of energy that has no apparent connection to the sun. the moon is to think for the motion of the ocean that we know is that. of proximity. to the water. especially at the equator. on the other side as the earth is literally pulled away from the ocean from the moon. we get the strongest tides and if you're in the right place at the right time the moon even provides enough energy to. incoming water. turtle nature of the moon's tidal power. and the idea of using the tides for humans purposes has been around for ages several hundred years ago enterprising engineers constructed flour mills powered by the daily. people have looked to harness the tide for electricity generation in the twentieth century a number of projects around the globe were proposed but were decried as economic madness for a time it looked as if the proponents of title power were fighting a losing battle but in one nine hundred sixty three the rance river estuary in brittany france was blocked off to start construction on what would be the first industrial sized power stati
of energy that has no apparent connection to the sun. the moon is to think for the motion of the ocean that we know is that. of proximity. to the water. especially at the equator. on the other side as the earth is literally pulled away from the ocean from the moon. we get the strongest tides and if you're in the right place at the right time the moon even provides enough energy to. incoming water. turtle nature of the moon's tidal power. and the idea of using the tides for humans purposes has...
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the primary energy. if you had the technology and you had a viable for the world war you were contributing to large programs so that you had a large industrial base remember that the one of the one of the speakers today i said that the power industry was an investment i think of a trillion dollars per year of money i don't know if that's the accurate figure but it's a pretty large figure and if you had to say a fairly substantial share of that as well as your oil and gas revenue time would be a tremendous boost to your industry in the prosperity of your people thank you thank you very much and it was a pleasure having you with thank you very much and just a reminder that my guest on the show today was rodney allen the winner of the global energy prize in two thousand feet up and that's it for now from all of us here if you want to have yourself spotlight just drop me a line spotlight will be back with more face time comment on what's going on in and outside russia until then stay on r.t. and take care th
the primary energy. if you had the technology and you had a viable for the world war you were contributing to large programs so that you had a large industrial base remember that the one of the one of the speakers today i said that the power industry was an investment i think of a trillion dollars per year of money i don't know if that's the accurate figure but it's a pretty large figure and if you had to say a fairly substantial share of that as well as your oil and gas revenue time would be a...
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Oct 28, 2012
10/12
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CNN
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it doesn't take a lot of energy. the last tsunami we had here created a seven-foot wave at kanului harbor. we saw the destruction that's gone on at several harbors. we're not going to forget the shot of that home floating through. we have a picture of that energy we want to show you here. this is the directional energy associated with this tsunami. in the last two events, in japan, last year, most of that energy was focused south of our islands. with one little sliver headed straight toward crescent city, california. we had destructive damage, waves five to six feet. back in chile, 2008 -- 2010, sorry. has it really been three straight years in a row? >> we've been here a lot lately. and it's always at night. >> three straight years in a row. okay, 2010 in chile, most of that energy was focused south of our islands. now you see this dramatic picture here of this graphic from the pacific tsunami warning center showing the directional energy. the strongest energy outputted from this magnitude 7.7 earthquake off british
it doesn't take a lot of energy. the last tsunami we had here created a seven-foot wave at kanului harbor. we saw the destruction that's gone on at several harbors. we're not going to forget the shot of that home floating through. we have a picture of that energy we want to show you here. this is the directional energy associated with this tsunami. in the last two events, in japan, last year, most of that energy was focused south of our islands. with one little sliver headed straight toward...
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out from the earth back into space from that initial energy of the sun there is not nor energy and if you're going back to you seem to say that the temperature it is temperature of the surface can be higher without there being a talk about energy input into the system richard while you're talking about the temperature of the ocean where you're not which is not a system that's driven by more energy all right gentlemen it's i want to stay away from the science because energy most of you are really not is exciting area where most of my viewers are not scientists so it's all right straight forward ok all right richard well you made the accusation is that something that was not scientific so ok excuse me i want to change gears because i want to talk about a good fun is your communication plenty of people from this type of thing here i mean if i can go to patrick before to the around two thousand and eight two thousand and nine you had newt gingrich you had mitt romney that flipped on this you actually had quite a few republicans that agreed with this and now the people say they're in compl
out from the earth back into space from that initial energy of the sun there is not nor energy and if you're going back to you seem to say that the temperature it is temperature of the surface can be higher without there being a talk about energy input into the system richard while you're talking about the temperature of the ocean where you're not which is not a system that's driven by more energy all right gentlemen it's i want to stay away from the science because energy most of you are...